British Fascism on the Rise

Smash the BNP!

Fascism is gaining ground in Britain. In May 2008, British National Party (BNP) cadre
Richard Barnbrook became the first fascist to win a seat in the Greater London Assembly.
He joins dozens of BNP councilors scattered around Britain—including twelve in their
Barking and Dagenham stronghold in East London and nine in Stoke-on-Trent in the Midlands.

In November 2008, a list with the names, home addresses and occupations of 13,500 BNP
members was leaked to the public. Predictably, a large proportion of them are current or
former employees of private security firms and/or the military, police and prison system.
One guard at a detention center for asylum-seekers was forced to resign after his
connection to the BNP was publicized. The presence of racists and outright fascists inside
the repressive apparatus of the capitalist state is hardly surprising:

“Over the past two years The Independent has helped reveal
nearly 300 allegations of brutality, including 38 claims of racism, made by asylum-seekers
about private security and immigration staff. Some of the allegations included abusive and
racist language, in which refugees fleeing persecution were referred to as
‘monkeys’ or told to ‘go back to their own countries’.”—Independent [London], 14 January

The social base of fascism extends far beyond the personnel of the state. Most fascist
shock troops are recruited from petty-bourgeois layers hostile to trade unions, along with
degraded lumpenproletarians and backward workers poisoned by chauvinism.

In the 1930s, the great Russian revolutionary, Leon Trotsky, noted that a fascist
social mobilization is the last resort of a capitalist class that feels threatened by mass
popular unrest:

“At the moment that the ‘normal’ police and military
resources of the bourgeois dictatorship, together with their parliamentary screens, no
longer suffice to hold society in a state of equilibrium—the turn of the fascist
regime arrives. Through the fascist agency, capitalism sets in motion the masses of the
crazed petty bourgeoisie and the bands of de-classed and demoralized
lumpenproletariat—all the countless human beings whom finance capital itself has
brought to desperation and frenzy.”—“What Next? Vital Questions for the German
Proletariat,” January 1932

Trotsky observed that fascist movements grow rapidly when there is both “a deep
social crisis, throwing the petty bourgeois masses off balance, and the lack of a
revolutionary party that would be regarded by the masses of the people as an acknowledged
revolutionary leader.” If, as Trotsky wrote, Marxism is:

“the party of revolutionary hope, then fascism, as a mass
movement, is the party of counterrevolutionary despair. When revolutionary hope
embraces the whole proletarian mass, it inevitably pulls behind it on the road of
revolution considerable and growing sections of the petty bourgeoisie.”
—“The Turn in the Communist International and the German Situation,”
September 1930 [emphasis in original]

To harness the despair and anger of the frenzied petty bourgeoisie, the fascists often
rant about settling accounts with plutocrats on behalf of the downtrodden “little
guy.” But, as Mussolini and Hitler demonstrated, fascism in power soon reveals
itself as the most brutal form of rule by big capital:

“German fascism, like the Italian, raised itself to power on the backs
of the petty bourgeoisie, which it turned into a battering ram against the working class
and the institutions of democracy. But fascism in power is least of all the rule of the
petty bourgeoisie. On the contrary, it is a most ruthless dictatorship of monopolist
capital.” —Leon Trotsky, “What is National Socialism?,”
1933

In his classic study, Fascism and Big Business, Daniel Guerin discussed the
conditions under which a section of the bourgeoisie may opt for fascism:

“When the economic crisis becomes acute, when the rate of profit sinks
toward zero, the bourgeoisie can see only one way to restore its profits: it empties the
pockets of the people down to the last centime. It resorts to what M. Caillaux, once
finance minister of France, expressively calls ‘the great penance’: brutal
slashing of wages and social expenditures, raising of tariff duties at the expense of the
consumer, etc. The state, furthermore, rescues bus-iness enterprises on the brink of
bankruptcy, forcing the masses to foot the bill….

“But such maneuvers are difficult under a democratic regime. As long as
democracy survives, the masses, though thoroughly deceived and plundered, have some means
of defense against the ‘great penance’: freedom of the press, universal
suffrage, the right to organize into unions and to strike, etc. Feeble defenses, it is
true, but still capable of setting some limit to the insatiable demands of the money
power. In particular, the resistance of the organized working class makes it rather
difficult to simply lower wages.”

While most British capitalists do not yet feel it necessary to seek extra-parliamentary
means to contain working-class struggle, the present economic crisis creates opportunities
for the fascists to grow.

BNP: Fascist Thugs in the Service of Capital

The BNP's recent electoral success provides its cadres with a platform for spewing
racist venom, sometimes, but not always, masked with “respectable” euphemisms.
The BNP is not a right-wing bourgeois splinter party—it is a fascist
organization that poses a deadly danger to trade unionists and all the oppressed. The
February 2008 issue of Searchlight, Britain's foremost anti-fascist journal,
documented the threat posed by BNP Führer Nick Griffin, who in the 1990s edited a
Croydon-based publication called The Rune:

“The Rune showed Griffin to be a hardliner par excellence. He
used the publication to argue forcefully against modernising the BNP, stating that
‘the electors of Millwall [who voted in the BNP's first local councilor in 1993] did
not back a post modernist rightist party but what they perceived to be a strong,
disciplined organisation with the ability to back up its slogan “Defend Rights for
Whites” with well-directed boots and fists. When the crunch comes power is the
product of force and will, not of rational debate.’”

The BNP was formed in 1982 by John Tyndall, former chairman of the National Front, and
Ray Hill of the neo-Nazi British Movement. Combat 18 (the numbers “1” and
“8” representing the position of Adolf Hitler's initials in the alphabet) has
long been associated with the BNP. In 1997, the National Socialist Movement (NSM) broke
from Combat 18. The NSM is most notorious for its member David Copeland, known as the
London nail bomber, whose attacks on a gay pub in Soho and the largely black and Asian
neighborhoods of Brixton and Brick Lane killed three people and injured hundreds more in
April 1999.

The BNP leadership tends to formally disavow much of the violence of its associates,
but stands ready to get involved when things heat up. During the 2001 Oldham “race
riots” in the north of England, BNP members joined National Front and Combat 18
thugs in attacking Asian youths:

“Several of those sent to prison last month for the Roundthorn Road
incident [the site of a fascist attack on Asians] were active BNP supporters. Darren and
Sharon Hoy are both regulars at BNP meetings, as are Bourne, Rhodes and Walsh. [Paul]
Brockway, ‘the General’, heads the FYC [the Oldham hooligan mob, the
‘Fine Young Casuals’] and has attended BNP and C18 [Combat 18] events in the
town. Matthew Berry, Hoy's cousin, was photographed with Darren Hoy giving a nazi salute
at a C18 gig in Wigan. James Clift was arrested only three weeks before the riots during
an earlier attempted racist incursion into an Asian area. Mark Priestley was sent to
prison in 1995 for his part in a C18 attack on a Chinese takeaway in Derbyshire. More
recently, in 2000, he was convicted for using racially abusive language and threatening
behaviour. He too has beem [sic] involved in the BNP. [Mick] Treacy [an Oldham BNP
organizer] knows these people well. Many of them continued to attend BNP events right up
until the judge sent them to prison for nine months each.”—Searchlight, July 2003

On 20 September 2008, 800 fascists, some wearing Nazi regalia, terrorized the locals
during a rally and a concert in Somerset held to commemorate the death of Ian Stuart
Donaldson, lead singer of Screwdriver, which helped raise funds for the National Front and
the BNP.

No Platform for Fascists!

The only way to deal with fascists is to mobilize sufficient force to crush them:

“Fascism finds unconscious helpers in all those who say that the
‘physical struggle’ is impermissible or hopeless, and demand of [French Prime
Minister Gaston] Doumergue the disarmament of his fascist guard. Nothing is so dangerous
for the proletariat, especially in the present situation, as the sugared poison of false
hopes. Nothing increases the insolence of the fascists so much as ‘flabby
pacifism’ on the part of the workers organizations. Nothing so destroys the
confidence of the middle classes in the working class as temporizing, passivity, and the
absence of the will to struggle.”—Leon Trotsky, “Whither France?,” October
1934

Fascism is not a set of ideas that can be discussed and debated—it is a program
of violent terror directed at the left and workers' movement, visible minorities,
immigrants, the disabled, homosexuals, the transgendered, Jews, Muslims and anyone else
who does not fit their psychotic vision of a “pure” society.

Fascism attracts the demoralized and disturbed, typically people with defective
personalities and low self-esteem who are bitterly disappointed with their lives and
looking for scapegoats. They are, in Trotsky's phrase, “human dust.”
Knock-backs, even on a relatively small scale, can have an immediate positive impact.
Would-be fascists are attracted by the prospect of terrorizing the defenseless—when
groups like Combat 18 or the BNP get hammered by their intended victims, their appeal
disappears and recruitment dries up.

At its peak in the 1930s, Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists (BUF) could hold
meetings of tens of thousands, yet they were stopped in their tracks on several occasions
by mass working-class action. On 9 September 1934, when BUF “Blackshirts,”
named after Benito Mussolini's thugs, tried to hold a rally in London's Hyde Park, 150,000
determined anti-fascists made sure it did not happen. Two years later, the BUF staged a
provocative march through the largely Jewish East End of London. Despite the efforts of
thousands of police to clear the way for the fascists, a powerful mobilization of over
250,000 working people blocked their path and forced the Blackshirts to retreat. This
victory, known as the “Battle of Cable Street,” boosted the morale of
anti-fascists across Britain, and demoralized the Mosleyites and their backers.

In the run-up to the “Battle of Cable Street,” the Communist Party (CP),
along with the Independent Labour Party, called on the government to ban the BUF march.
The CP, acting on directives from the Stalinist bureaucracy in Moscow, was pursuing
“unity” with the supposedly progressive bourgeoisie, and did not want to risk
being labeled “extremists.” Instead of confronting the fascists, the
Stalinists proposed to ignore the BUF provocation and hold an “anti-fascist”
rally several miles away in Trafalgar Square.

Joe Jacobs, a CP secretary for Stepney in East London at the time and later a
Trotskyist, recounted:

“We in the CP were supposed to tell people to go to Trafalgar Square and
come back in the evening to protest after Mosley had marched. The pressure from
the people of Stepney who went ahead with their own efforts to oppose Mosley left no doubt
in our minds that the CP would be finished in Stepney if this was allowed to go through as
planned by our London leaders.”

Jacobs reports getting the following note from Frank Lefitte, the CP's East London
organizer:

“‘Keep order: no excuse for Government to say we, like BUF are
hooligans. If Mosley decides to march let him. Don't attempt disorder (Time too short to
get a “They shall not pass” policy across. It would only be a harmful stunt).
Best see there is a good, strong meeting at each end of march. Our biggest trouble tonight
will be to keep order and discipline.’”

Jacobs was astounded:

“I could hardly believe my eyes. How could they be so blind to what was
happening in Stepney? The slogan ‘They shall not pass’ was already on everyone's
lips and being whitewashed on walls and pavements….

· · ·

“In any case, the people of East London had their own ideas about all
this and would oppose Mosley with their bodies, no matter what the CP said. We argued long
and hard.”—Out of the Ghetto

The CP leaders eventually abandoned their cowardly maneuver, but only after it became
clear that they risked losing influence over their working-class base if they ducked the
fight to block Mosley.

Socialist Party Dialogues with BNP

Trotsky's policy regarding fascists was clear and unambiguous. But many ostensibly
Trotskyist groups today take a very different attitude. For example, the Socialist Party
(SP—flagship of the Committee for a Workers' International) generally prefers not to
refer to the BNP as “fascist,” choosing instead to describe it as
“far-right,” “racist,” “homophobic” or
“sexist.” The SP's reluctance derives from political, rather than
terminological, considerations—i.e., a desire not to alienate BNP supporters:

“…where people are voting to punish New Labour merely calling the
BNP ‘fascists’ is counter-productive. It is the BNP leadership who are fascists, not
the voters and even some members do not agree with these far-right ideas.

“During elections when Socialist Party activists have spoken to people
with ‘Vote BNP’ window posters they have patiently explained and discussed with
them. Some have swapped their posters over on the basis of seeing the need for a united
working-class party.”—Socialist, 10 July 2008

The SP has a history of indulging a variety of unsavory elements. In January 2008, when
over 20,000 cops marched to Westminster to demand higher pay for enforcing capitalist
repression, the SP sought to give this reactionary mobilization a progressive spin:

“This is in many ways a momentous occasion, since the last time they
took any action over pay was 1919….

“Socialist Party members got a mixed response but there was clearly a
strong underlying anger at the government….

“Unusually compared to most demonstrations, the police did not talk the
numbers down! And the Police Federation had to distance themselves from the presence of
the BNP's London Mayoral candidate on the march.”—Socialist, 30 January 2008

The “BNP's London Mayoral candidate,” Richard Barnbrook, the Greater London
Assembly member, was not merely “present”—he marched right at the head
of the demonstration. He “had been told by officers that he was welcome and said a
number of the protesting police officers had agreed to be interviewed for BNP TV”
(Guardian [London], 24 January 2008).

A few months later Barnbrook was approached in the street by SPers, who asked:

“what about the BNP councillors in Stoke or Kirklees who voted for cuts
and privatisation and tax increases—or don't even bother to turn up to the council
chambers?

“Barnbrook handily didn't know anything about that. So we explained it
to him—the BNP pretend to be the party for the white working class but when they get
in the council chamber they preside over cuts, the same as the three main
parties.”—Socialist, 14 May 2008

By sanctioning discussions with this scum, the SP leadership teaches its followers that
fascism is a set of ideas suitable for debate. This is entirely wrong. The BNP poses a
deadly danger to leftists and all the oppressed—the only way to
“explain” anything to a fascist is through forceful direct action.

When the BNP was trying to expand its activity in Glasgow's heavily working-class
Pollock area in September 1989, hundreds of energetic anti-fascist youths met to discuss
how to respond. Militant, as the SP was then known, pushed for a “flabby
pacifist” debate:

“We decided to challenge the fascists to an open debate—originally
to be held in a local football ground. Some of the youth wanted to take matters into their
own hands. But we said we should wait until we had this meeting. Although normally we
wouldn't have considered debating the fascists we realised we could thoroughly discredit
them in the eyes of the youth—and thought they probably wouldn't turn up
anyway.” —Militant, 22 September 1989, cited in Workers
Hammer , November/December 1989

Militant subsequently approached the fascists a second time to propose a debate. The
only reason it did not happen was that the BNP, perhaps unable to believe the depths of
the stupidity of these reformists, decided their offer was “too dodgy” to
accept.

On 20 September 2008, 350 fascists held a rally in Stoke to commemorate a BNP thug,
Keith Brown, who was killed a year earlier when his neighbor, Habib Khan, found Brown
strangling his son. The SP, which participated in a “peace and unity vigil”
held as a counter-rally to the BNP event, made the incredible claim that “Keith
Brown was tragically stabbed to death by his Muslim neighbour over a year ago”
(Socialist, 23 September 2008). The only thing that was tragic about Keith
Brown's death was that Khan was sent to jail for eight years for it.
“Militants” who preach pacifism to the victims of fascist terror, and see the
loss of a BNP hoodlum as “tragic,” have no business claiming to be any sort of
socialists.

SWP: From Confrontation to ‘Anti-Fascist’ Pacifism

In the mid-1970s there was a surge of fascist activity spearheaded by the National
Front (NF). The Socialist Workers Party (SWP) initially responded with anti-fascist
mobilizations aimed at confronting the NF. On 13 August 1977 in Lewisham, thousands of
anti-fascists, led by the SWP, successfully prevented the NF from marching. The
Economist, which featured the demonstration on its front cover, reported:
“The police thought they could control the march. They were wrong.” The
issue's lead editorial, referring to “echoes of Cable Street,” observed that:

“the Socialist Workers party has succeeded once more in exacerbating
tension between London's police and its black community, so advancing its message that
only the far left is ready to fight for the rights of blacks against a hostile political
establishment.”—Economist, 20 August 1977

The Times (15 August 1977) pronounced: “the blame for Saturday's
violence must be laid squarely on the Socialist Workers' Party, whose members and
adherents, some of them armed with vicious weapons, came prepared to fight.”
Britain's ruling class was clearly alarmed that thousands of Asian, black and other youths
were prepared to follow the SWP's lead in spiking the NF provocation. Alex Callinicos and
Alastair Hatchett responded to widespread criticism of the SWP by bourgeois pundits and
labor bureaucrats with an article entitled, “In Defence of Violence”:

“The physical struggle is as important now as it was in the 1930s. The
Nazi leaders of the National Front are faced with a major strategic problem. They have
succeeded in attracting a considerable protest vote, especially from working-class voters
disillusioned with Labour, suspicious of the Tories and willing to blame the blacks for
all the problems under the sun. But the membership attracted by the NF's racism is very
different from the hardened Nazi cadre that Tyndall and Webster need in order to succeed.

“The NF will only begin to attract the interest and financial backing of
important sections of the bourgeoisie, and not the occasional racist or crank, unless they
can prove that they are a worthwhile option. This means building a fascist fighting
formation that can, one day, take on the workers' movement and smash its organisations. In
other words, the NF leaders must turn their membership, still predominantly
‘soft’ and racist (except for the hardened thugs of the Honour Guard), into
fascist storm-troopers.

“The Nazi marches through black areas are an important part of this
process.”—International Socialism (1st series), No. 101,
September 1977

This is exactly right, but after Lewisham the SWP leadership began denouncing direct
action as “squadism,” and instead launched the more bourgeois-respectable
Anti-Nazi League (ANL).

The ANL held a rally of tens of thousands in Trafalgar Square on 30 April 1978. After a
few speeches by union bureaucrats, participants set off on a four-mile hike to Victoria
Park, for a punk rock “Carnival.” The next day, May Day, over a thousand NF
fascists marched under police protection from Portland Place in central London to Hoxton
in the East End without any opposition. This was the first time the NF had ever been able
to march in London without incident.

On 24 September 1978, 2,000 fascists marched in London from Embankment to the East End,
without meeting any serious resistance. This time, the leadership of the ANL led thousands
of militants in the opposite direction, from Hyde Park to Brixton, for “Carnival
2.” The then-revolutionary Spartacist League reported on this disgraceful desertion:

“Lulled by ANL leaders into thinking that all was well in the East End,
an estimated sixty to one hundred thousand people stood in the sun and ‘rocked
against racism’ in Brixton, and only a handful of ANL supporters joined leftists and
local immigrants in the Brick Lane area for an anti-fascist demonstration called by the
Hackney and Tower Hamlets Defence Committee. In all, perhaps a thousand or twelve hundred
anti-fascist militants gathered in the East End. Pitifully weak and woefully disorganised,
they had no chance of getting near, let alone stopping, the Front's deliberately
provocative ‘march against communism’.”—Spartacist Britain, October 1978

A gang of 50 NF thugs celebrated their victory by rampaging through a predominantly
Asian estate off Brick Lane, smashing shop windows and threatening local residents. The
SWP leadership, pleased by the turnout at its “anti-fascist” carnival,
responded with a petition calling for the removal of the new NF headquarters in the East
End. The November 1978 issue of SpartacistBritain acidly commented:

“True to its character, the ANL has resorted to that classic instrument
of ‘militant’ struggle, so beloved of the pacifists, preachers and Labour
reformists…a petition. This petition calls for the ‘removal’ of the
fascist headquarters. But who is supposed to do the ‘removing’? Certainly not
the masses of workers and oppressed minorities: according to the ANL, they are supposed to
spend their time listening to ‘anti-Nazi’ speeches from union bureaucrats and
Liberals and dancing at Carnivals, not ‘falling into the trap’ of confronting
the fascists in the streets. Clearly, the ‘removal’ is supposed to be
organised by the local Labour-controlled Council, since calls for state bans against the
NF go hand-in-hand with social-patriotic leaflets and pacifist Carnivals to make up the
sum total of the ANL's anti-fascist strategy.”

In August 2008, IBT comrades participated in an anti-fascist demonstration in the
village of Denby, Derbyshire to protest the BNP's annual “Red, White and Blue”
festival. They reported:

“NSBNP [Nottinghamshire Stop the BNP campaign] was the main organiser of
the protest, but with little national cooperation, only about 400 people turned up. Much
of the blame belongs to Unite Against Fascism (UAF), one of the Socialist Workers Party's
(SWP) front groups, which called a similar demonstration at the same place but at a
different time than the one organised by NSBNP. UAF failed to organise coaches from
London, which might have significantly increased the size of the
demonstration.

· · ·

“NSBNP set up a platform for speakers before the march towards Denby was
to begin at about 11:45 am. But UAF irresponsibly started to march before the speakers had
finished, thereby temporarily splitting the demonstration. There was further tension over
whether UAF or NSBNP banners should be at the front of the march.

· · ·

“Not everyone saw the need for militant action against the fascists, who
brazenly hung about the demonstration, down side streets and at the assembly point. Combat
18, the military wing of the British neo-Nazi organisation Blood & Honour, were
rumoured to be guarding the farm. Yet the demonstration organisers had evidently made no
serious provision for self-defence, and it was apparent that they had no real intention of
actually preventing the fascists from holding their hate-fest, despite the SWP's claim to
want ‘to stop [the] Nazi BNP rally’ (Socialist Worker, 16 August).
Some people were foolish enough to bring small children on the march.

“Back in Codnor, Love Music Hate Racism (LMHR), another SWP front group,
had already set up stalls and a stage with music, but most of the crowd dispersed soon
after returning to the site. After this frustrating protest, which left the fascists
unscathed to carry on with their business, it is perhaps not surprising that LMHR was
unable to bring ‘people together through music’. ‘Moral
witnessing’, reliance on cops and sectarian division do not make for successful
anti-fascist actions.”—www.bolshevik.org, 21 August
2008

For United-Front Action to Smash the BNP!

It is necessary to initiate labor-based “united-front” actions to
physically confront and disperse the fascists whenever they attempt to mobilize. Following
the Denby debacle, our comrades proposed: “Close tactical cooperation between
stewards from each participating organisation could be achieved without blurring the
political lines between them, as each group would be free to put forward its own programme
in its own name” (Ibid.).

The basis of a united front to stop the BNP would be an agreement to mobilize
sufficient force to prevent the fascists from rearing their heads, and to teach any who
dared appear a painful lesson. All organizations committed to ridding the streets of these
thugs would be welcome to participate without having to adopt a particular set of
political ideas or belong to any sort of front group. Everyone would be free to put
forward their own distinctive views. This sort of non-sectarian united-front approach has
the potential to attract the broadest number of militants, and thus maximize the chances
of dealing serious blows to the fascists.

The BNP poses an immediate and acute danger—it must be confronted before it
becomes even stronger. Successfully spiking the next “Red, White and Blue”
festival would be a real victory for workers, minorities and all those targeted by the
fascists. A united front offers the best framework for conducting an effective fight,
because it combines organizational flexibility with political openness. Ultimately, the
only way to eliminate the scourge of fascism once and for all is to uproot the capitalist
social system that breeds it.